Yuma Daily Sun, The (Newspaper) - April 19, 1946, Yuma, Arizona TUB AT As reported by U S Weather Bureau lust Lowest lust Average high this Average low this humidity at il AND THE TINEL WEATHER FORECAST TO SATURDAY NIGHT Considerable high cloudiness with temperature about the same VOLUME 93 ARIZONA Friday April 19 THE ARIZONA VOLUME 93 U N COUNCIL MAY PROBE FRANCO CASE Australian Plan May Be Accepted Next Tuesday nv it n Hulled Press NEW YORK April The Australian proposal for a for- mal United Nations investigation of the Franco regime in Spain today had an excellent ebance of adoption Russia objects Russian reaction to the proposal to facts rather than speeches whether Franco Spain menaces world peace was as usual unknown Like most of the other Council members viet Delegate Andrei A Gromyko must seek new instructions from his home government But initial reaction of other delegations indicated that the Australian plan would find a only the ever present Russian the Soviets de- cide to oppose in the way of the first United Nations inquiry Even the Polish tion thought the proposal an in- one In Easier The Council was in Easter re- cess until noon PST Tuesday but when it returns it will be prepared to do the the Russians another resounding defeat in the Iranian case by voting S to 3 to keep the jurisdiction of the case until May date by which the Russians have promised to have all their troops out of Iran 2 Vote on the Australian lution to set up a sub- committee to investigate the Spanish situation and report back by May 17 If accepted this would defer action on the Polish resolution for immediate tic quarantine of posal that five of the Council members doomed by opposing the last two days of Council debate The first month of the Security Council's deliberations in the ed Slates ended last night after long of speeches about Spain and receipt of a re- port from the Council's committee of experts which voted 8 lo H that the Council could keep a ease on its agenda even if both parties to il requested its U of A Students Threaten to Become Long Hairs Yaquis Refuse to Permit Pictures Of Passion Play SMITH Tress Shift U A U Ariz A pril 10 photographer lor Holiday Magazine but firmly permission today to take of I ho climactic scenes of the annual Yaqui Indian re- enactment of the betrayal crucifixion and tion nl Christ at this lage liJ miles from Arizona's cap- ital Tho Indians said they would Innk upon such an net as tion Kven a plea barked by from the sheriff's of- and the Thoenix chamber of commerce failed to cause them to from their stand they said they would come respectful spectators Today tomorrow and Easier Sunday the final scenes of a Yaqui version of medieval passion plays which they have staged in observance of and Easter since 3539 when Christianity was carried in- n their remote valley in Sonora Mexico hy Spanish explorers and missionaries Tonight of the ion will be followed tonight by a danoe truly pagan Half naked in weird headdresses their bodies painted and oiled the Indians will stage a mock bration of the downfall of the false prophet Rut tomorrow will find them into worshippers at the slain Christ's tomb Again there will be dancing Lo native music but a change will have over contortions of the cers and rhythm of the music before a note of lusty vengeance ran through the ceremonies there first will be manifestations of abnegation and heart-rending followed as Eastern dawn approaches by a rising tide of expectation and hope that will become a chant of and victory With voice o n paean of Indians will march in a body to the church where a visiting priest will say mass A similar observance of Easter in another village Tucson was closed to the public thin year by an epidemic of Skating Rink to Be UN Home This skating rink in Flushing Meadow Park site of the City of New exhibit during the World's Fair will soon be renovated at a cost of to form the auditorium in which the UN General Assembly will convene on Sept 3 Right to Work Petitions Being Circulated Here REJECTS DEMAND THAT HE RESIGN TUCSON Ariz April by who ised not to date short-haired sissies University of Arizona men students today boycotted shops to protest SI cut prices The said they would be until prices returned to HO cents Missouri Woman Hurt In Crash A blowout apparently caused a to overturn on U S SO near Aztec this morning Mrs John of St Louis to hospitalized Her injuries wore described cut prices Tho students snid they was evidently not injured ing to reports Asks Atom Death NKA Earl 25 convicted slayer picked up by FBI in Knoxville following his escape from the ington District death row arrives in Washington Monday by deputy innr- shals is lo petition President Truman for permission to die in tho atom bomb tests July 1 Tress TOKYO April Pre- mier today re- resolution from a com- four Japanese parties demanding the immediate resignation of his inet to make way for the of a democratic ment AL the same time Welfare ister a member of the Liberal party submitted his resignation apparently in cordance with his party's stand against the government remaining in power told the committee composed of Liberals Social Cooperatives and Com- that he could not quit just because you tell me to do so I do not think my withdrawal will improve the present the premier said Jl just happens that our views and met the situation differently Committee members said they would meet to plan a movement to oust and his cabinet Predicted statement came ly H few hours after Cabinet Wataru said cabinet is considering the question resigning en bloc in order lo stabilize the situation auri had he cabinet would resign few days The government fully the attitude of the various cal and is even ing the question of resigning in to stabilize said Leaders of Japan's major cal parties with the exception of tho Progressives which accepted application for membership have joined and labor in demands that the present government resign immediately 37 Persons Placed Jobs In March By USES Office Thn Yunia U H Employ incut Service placed persons in jobs during Connor has announced placements were made in February Now for work filed with the local office in March number 120 as compared with 140 in February The movement which was started in Phoenix months ago by a group of war veterans spread to Yuma with the of to place an on tlie November Arizona ballot James G a Pacific j war veteran discharged in ruary is in Yuma this week on behalf of the Veterans Work committee of Arizona Petitions for signatures of zona voters are in circulation here to gain the names required to put a measure before the zona voters in the November tions The proposed constitutional amendment No person ahull be denied the opportunity to obtain or retain employment because of in a labor organization nor shall the state or any sub- division thereof or any tion individual or association of any kind enter into any agreement or oral which excludes any person from employment or continuation of employment be- cause uf in t bor organization Makes The committee which is com- posed of six Phoenix war ans embodied their beliefs in this j statement During the war we were praised for fighting to preserve f reed n in But we re tu rn cd fro m the war to discover that one of our fundamental freedoms has been taken away from us during our This is the right to work out joining a labor organization unless we choose to do so We the Veterans com- of Arizona believe that we and all citizens should have the privilege of association or non- with ail organizations Says Doughnut Problem Was Nut Too Tough to Crack April Mike Savaresy dis- closed today he sold out his doughnut business If you make the holes he said il takes mure dough in If you make he small il lakes dough to fill the hole M was driving mo So 1 sold mil Gov Osborn Adds 2 Points to Special Session Call PHOENIX Ariz April Sidney P Osborn's call summoning the Legislature inlo special session next Tuesday day contained two additional points one drawn lo bencfil Mesa other for Osborn announced lasl night lhal he would ask the to amend the present law ing school consolidations so lhal Mesa district can absorb Alma and to clarify the jurisdiction of police courts lo remove doubts concerning powers of the minor judiciary in Previously the governor dis- closed that his call contained three major housing facilities al the state's three of higher ing a higher maximum of old age assistance and direct relief grants and revision of the inoperative law lion of a central agency for ing surplus government property and supplies Osborn said he will make recommendations lo the lators when they convene at 10 Tuesday Hew Walkouts Raise In U S to MARSHALL SEEKS TO END CHINESE WAR Forces Holding Out In Changchun RAN April 111 monitor reported the Shinsha News Agency from that Hie ern ic Communist Army capital of Manchuria at 7 p.m yesterday The message recorded hv the K S Information Service said army had taken control of the city and sel up n democratic government Wallace Speaks At L A Jackson Day Meeting LOS April Secretary of Commerce Henry A Wallace that a Re- publican victory next fall would usher in i cycle of boom bust chaos He told a Jackson Hay publican parly hud proved itself of last night that the to be the parly of reaction Fortunately these agents of reaction have reckoned without j the will of the American people that all-powerful instrument he Progressive forces must keen control of nut ion tn both political ami economic ocracy for United States Tu prevent and urged that ident Truman he the tools It is national he sniff to work with when the people elect i sive president ami j or vice No Charges Filed In Stabbing Case Police Breech re- ported this morning who was in tho night Prod fvt had been released his recognizance and that no charges bad yet been filed Bang who was rushed to hospital for treatment of deep kniO wounds in his stomach reported to bn showing some signs of improvement today il- his condition is still only CAIRO April In- day lifter hy Truman thai hr his world food lour of nl once In I us president yesterday Ity UN IT EH ESS in sutn and ber of American ers tn today CIO Aline Mill mill Smeller Workers in al a wage settlement with the Cupper Co however and more than striking miners expected to return lo next week Nineteen hundred CIO al Radio and Machine Workers struck Hoover Co plant at Canton O in n job tion dispute Ohio Match Co plants at and O were closed when members of the AFF Matchmakers Council ed out to support wage demands Another wage dispute ed a strike at the William Bros Boiler and Co Minneapolis where workers walked out At South lend Three hundred CIO repairmen inn maintenance workers I at Aviation Corp j plant nl South Bend Intl fore- inc other workers into ness Whether tin company nor the union offered an explanation for lie walkout The annual movement nl iron ore begun on Lake Superior but mines which provided 47 per cent of the shipments lasl year were tied by strikes Only three Minnesota companies have ed agreements with the CIO Uni- ted union winch called a strike Feb 1 to enforce demands for an cent hourly wage increase Negotiators for the nations soft coal operators left ton They agreed to return over whenever Secretary of bor Lewis B a could be ed mil with the AFL United Mine Workers union which represents 400 000 striking miners A presidential board recommended a hourly wage increase and some rules changes for nnd trainmen represented by two brotherhoods which have threatened to strike Union were meet at Cleveland to vote on the findings Earthquake Felt At Riverside Cal LOK April A very earthquake shook some sections of southern fornia today at PST The movement was not felt in Los Angeles Reports from 50 miles southeast ol Los Angeles said two moderate shocks were felt The seismograph at California tule of Technology recorded the minor earth movement Price Slump Halts Salt River Valley Lettuce Deal PHOENIX April With the glutted and the out of prices Salt Valley lettuce of some still in the fields livery I packed yesterday meant H loss of fiQ cents one shipper I just folded up without filling the car spotted at shed No estimate of total losses taken by tho lettuce growers and pers this season was forthcoming hut they have been disastrous for some One heavy his loss was FOUR-POWER COUNCIL GETS U S WARNING Resists Proposal To Restrict U S Witnesses TOKYO April IS The Allied Four-Power Council ly divided over a British proposal to restrict witnesses explaining Gen Douglas policies received an American warning day not to pry into tho supremo commander's armor for soft spots Britain Russia and China lined April 111 Gen George C today into a of tions on the Manchurian crisis preparatory to a now effort to Marshall conferred with his military and diplomatic advisers to obtain the background of de- while he was in tho United Slates He consulted Pre- mier T V and Francis chief of staff of his military advisory primp night he planned to dine with Generalissimo ami Mine Marshall's consultations took on urgency in the face of reports that Communist artillery had placed under heavy fire the iso- lated remnants of the Nationalist garrison in Changchun In Knur Buildings The Changchun Nationalists were said to bo barricaded in four downtown buildings It appeared doubtful they would he able tn hold out until the arrival of re- The controlled Central News Agency indicated that the fall of the Manchurian capital to the Communists was at hand It snid the city's fate would be decided today 1 A Central dispatch quoting Mukden military quarters said the Communist were attacking in Changchun with four or five tanks whose drivers and ners arc officers of a certain country H is obvious that the tanks are supplied by a certain try the dispatch added It said a Soviet plane flew low over Changchun on April 10 said the government troops withdrawing with heavy casualties had barricaded selves in the Rank police headquarters the power company and the postoffice building moldings an- Shelled field guns battered the bank and power company buildings ceaselessly yesterday with incendiary shells Defenders inside the postoffice building were said to be maintaining wireless communication with the world Gen Tu government that strong Communist forces j were concentrated north of chuting between Changchun He anticipated stiff resistance lo the Nationalist First Army moving up tin Changchun toward the capital Tu said the Communist forces I included regulars and irregulars Lt John W Rohrer Returns From Service said to approach j together in favor of a proposed tered a nervous breakdown and j by whi h cil would control all witnesses before it including the form and quantity of their dence The United States strongly re- the proposal Brig Gen Courtney Whitney who made a is confined to a hospital and overlapping of the Salt River Volley deal with that of the Salinas Calif area due to early arrival of hot ther were among causes uting to the situation With 200 cars daily going from Salinas to market while the Phoenix deal was Valley meant a loss on every car shipped Countrywide demand does not exceed cars a day Demand very slow market weak best lettuce 51.50 to a crate in Phoenix was the way the Crop Reporting Service summed it all up The Yuma area fared belief be- cause bulk of its crop was moved before the big break in prices Shipments from there were on Page 6 three-hour speech before the Wednesday said the United Farm Bloc Solons Muster forces to Eliminate OPA ers appearing to defend thur's occupation policies i is Made Finally the Council decided that requests for specific information from Supreme Headquarters auto- would solve the problem of presenting evidence to the Council It also adopted a priority system for submitting items to the agenda The British proposal was aimed at Whitney for his lengthy filibuster on Wednesday American representatives said any attempt to limit invited speakers would be undemocratic and a lation of the principles of free speech The Council adjourned until ril 30 The Russians asked that the Council take up at that lime a British request for information on a directive dissolving holding com- panies BACK OF THE HEADLINES Lines To Bring Service To Soon j Western Air Linos officials met i yesterday with members of county aviation commission the hoard of supervisors and LI Col lean Miller of the Yuma Army Air field for the purpose of gathering information necessary to establish air service between Yuma and the Imperial valley Representing the air lines were Ai Apablasa Russell 1 Smith and Marion W Mr Landcs said today that they had been able through their conferences with officials here lo check all facilities at the air field and ing a short time would be able to make definite plans for bringing service to These plans would be announced with a few weeks Mr Landes said Tress Correspondent In the midst of the heated sions of the United Nations curity Council in New York the Four are preparing for the meeting of their foreign ministers in Paris next Thursday Highly controversial matters slated to come before the Prussian and United Slates ministers in their endeavor to clear tile way for the conference on European peace treaties which it is hoped can be held in Paris next month Despite the inability of the deputies to reach even a tentative agreement on their rent London meetings a dispatch from London reports a feeling f optimism among British officials that the ministers themselves will he able to break the deadlock Hasis Unexplained The basis for such a feeling was not fully explained However British quarters were represented as believing that Russia's own in- will move her to mise on issues in and Mediterranean The is that Britain United States and France do not think economic recovery of Italy and of Europe in general ran really start until peace has been They suspect that Russia may that the ciple applies equally to the Hal kans in which the Soviet Union is deeply interested as a [eeder area for her post-war The idea that western ers might sign separate peace treaties in ot Russia balks on a general agreement which was advanced by anonymous sources in Washington was rejected in informed London quarters as ab- surd Such a move it was pointed out would torpedo the essential idea of post-war collaboration among the big powers and would prove impracticable in any ease Cosi of Regardless of the hopeful view taken in some London quarters the fact remains that there will have to be it great of give and take on both sides if harmony Continued on Page G I First Lieutenant Mm W cr arrived at the home of his parents Mr ami Mrs Mm K Kohrer avenue April Hi Lt Rohrer is on leave from Army Kittli er Air Force An- squadron in In- i in Philippines j from February In In- end the war Hr purl es to near the j of tim 1 was awaiting home I 1 imp Menle j cr is tn Medal Libera in battle stars WASHINGTON April state senators massed today for an attempt to OPA They rallied around Sen Elmer Thomas D an anicmlmcnl to the price control extension which would let OPA control almost nothing but rents Other prepared other restrictions and there was an increasing feeling that OPA would fare little better in tho Senate than it did in the House The voted to heat most of the life out of OPA before passing and sending lo the Senate an day to extend the agency for nine months beyond the present June expiration date The vote was to 12 for the final version of the measure which Price Chief Paul Porter said could cause a -10 per cent rise in the cost of living Provisions The House would end subsidies at the end of 1946 meat subsidies to and profits to producers distributors and retailers on every item of the had hardly been recorded in congressional records the alarmed Porter issued an anguished appeal for the Senate to avert the predicted multi-billion dollar rise in rosin He the House version a- mounted to repeal of price con- trol the OPA to remove on commodities making lift at least half the cost of living He said these included meat milk coal many textiles ami nearly ail dairy products except He soaring prices for automobiles electric refrigerators i and household with no restrict if ns in OPA cured and hoarding i Philip Killed Ins to act once to tn protest against the i hill Murray i killed the Reveals Dog Went Wild By Female Coyote Ariz April story of a that lured by a female coyote reverted to type deserted his master and set out with his wild mate on a rampage highlights the March report of the U S Fish and Wildlife service Reporting on the drive to ex- terminate predatory animals in Arizona District Director E M Mercer said the dog and his mate were killed by a federal hunter in the mountain range ter they killed slock near the home of the dog's former master in the area Instances of dogs going wild are not but cases have been reported of females being lured However Mercer recalled a case where the owner of a female dog near Flagstaff was forced to confine the animal to keep her from answering the call of a male lobo Federal exterminated 60 predators in the state in March including Gofi coyotes 37 bobcats and ore lion The latter was in Kaibab National Forest For Auto Phones more to i On the oilier I m- Republicans expected ttf i hill to be treated ill Hie I the Hospital Notes April IS iino lit Mary I cotton cut ton To Mr and milk livestock poultry as Kinney mi Apr a son j right and 11 I jCarl Ammons Junior Home For Footer Visit Pleads Guilty to Forgery Charge U Jr is home WilliMin is Easter vacation Ho is en- tn sentence next State col- for the crime of forgery nt His parents are guilly to the in Mr and Mrs Carl Ammons of Superior court here yesterday I 712 avenue Roy Venton worKS nt mh of ball aerial tho flagpole al u Francisco tele- phone building despite winds When job Is in about SO days telephone communication be- tween antes trucks and homes or offices will start on an experimental bails